OPINION
Opinion by:
This is an accelerated interlocutory appeal from an order denying the Gerwells’ plea in abatement and motion to compel arbitration and stay litigation. 1 Because we find that the underlying dispute falls within the scope of an existing arbitration clause, we vacate the trial court’s order and render judgment that the parties submit to binding arbitration in accordance with their arbitration agreement.
Factual and PROCEDURAL History
In May 1993, appellant Kristine Gerwell, appellee Michelle Moran, and Suzette Dooley entered, into a written partnership agreement (hereinafter “1993 agreement”) to form The Sunrise Group, a partnership created for the purpose of purchasing and managing a professional office building. In general, the 1993 agreement covers all aspects of the partnership including, but not limited to, establishment of the partnership, capitalization, management, profits/losses and distribution, and respective liabilities for partnership debt. Each partner is liable for her pro rata share of the partnership debt. Relevant to the underlying dispute, the 1993 agreement expressly prohibits a partner from selling, assigning, mortgaging, hypothecating, or encumbering her interest in the partnership without the express written permission of all the remaining partners, without regard to interest (emphasis added). Also relevant to the underlying dispute, the 1993 agreement contains an arbitration clause, which provides:
If any controversy or claim arising out of this Agreement cannot be settled by the Partners," the controversy or claims shall be settled by arbitration in the City of San Antonio, State of Texas, in accordance with the rules of the American Arbitration Association then in effect, and judgment on the award may be entered in any court having jurisdiction.
(emphasis added). Each partner owned a one-third interest in the partnership.
In 1994, Dooley assigned her interest in the partnership to Edwin Gerwell; the 1993 agreement was amended only to reflect Dooley’s withdrawal and Edwin’s addition to the partnership.
*30 In late 1998 — early 1999, Moran decided to leave the partnership and assign her one-third interest to the Gerwells. Pursuant to the 1993 agreement, the parties entered into a written agreement (the “assignment agreement”) to execute Moran’s transfer of interest to the Gerwells. In part, the assignment agreement provides that the Gerwell would pay Moran $85,000 less “credits, adjustments, prorations of taxes, insurance, interest, rents and other liabilities of the partnership for her interest in the partnership.” (emphasis added). Before signing the assignment agreement, Moran inquired about both the meaning of the above-emphasized clause and specifically asked how a mortgage loan with NationsBank for the building where the partnership operated would be handled. With respect to her first-stated concern, Moran claims that Kristine Gerwell explained that the above-emphasized clause referred only to regular monthly expenses of the partnership and one repair item on the air conditioner unit, which would be deducted from the sale proceeds of $85,000. With respect to the outstanding mortgage loan, Moran claims that she and the Gerwells agreed that Moran would be released from the note liability.
The relevant clauses in the assignment agreement are as follows:
In consideration of the agreement of Assignee to pay the sum equal to Eighty Five Thousand Dollars ($85,000) to Assignor, a deposit of One Thousand Dollars ($1000) paid to Assignor upon signing of Assignment of Partnership Interest to be held in trust;
Cash, certified or local cashier’s check delivered on closing and delivery of funding to complete payment of purchase price (after credits, adjustments, prorations of taxes, insurance, interest, rents and other liabilities of the partnership). Current partnership loan, for which Assignor is personally one of three guarantors, will have a release executed by NationsBank which will be forwarded to the Assignor in partial fulfillment of this agreement.
The assignment agreement does not contain an arbitration clause.
The parties signed the assignment agreement on January 25, 1999. On February 15, 1999, Moran received a check from the Gerwells for $22,811.93, an amount the Gerwells arrived at by deducting Moran’s liabilities of the partnership from the $85,000 purchase price.
Believing she had been underpaid, Moran filed suit against Kristine and Edwin Gerwell, alleging breach of the assignment contract, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, fraudulent inducement, and unjust enrichment. As plead, Moran alleged that the Gerwells breached the assignment agreement by wrongfully deducting her liability under the NationsBank loan from the $85,-000 purchase price. Moran also alleged that the Gerwells fraudulently induced her into signing the assignment agreement by making misrepresentations about the extent of her liabilities and, specifically, certain liabilities that would we deducted from the purchase price. In addition to seeking monetary damages, Moran requested that the assignment be set aside due to the Gerwells’ fraudulent conduct. Moran also sought a temporary injunction to prevent the Gerwells from transferring any interest in specific partnership property during the pendency of the proceeding.
In response, the Gerwells answered with a general denial and filed a plea in abatement and motion to compel arbitration and stay the litigation, arguing that the dispute was subject to the arbitration clause provided for in the 1993 agreement.
After a hearing on the Gerwells’ motion to compel arbitration and Moran’s application for temporary injunction, the trial court denied all requested relief. This appeal follows. See Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem. Code Ann. § 171.098(a)(1) (Vernon Supp. 1999).
*31 Standard op Review
In order to compel arbitration, a party must establish the existence of a valid agreement to arbitrate and that the claims asserted fall within the scope of the arbitration agreement.
Leander Cut Stone Co. v. Brazos Masonry,
Scope op ArbitRation Clause
In conducting our review to determine whether the dispute regarding the assignment agreement must be arbitrated, we are mindful of the strong public policy favoring arbitration in Texas.
See Prudential Sec., Inc. v. Marshall,
We further note that tort claims are subject to arbitration. In determining whether an asserted tort claim is subject to arbitration, we consider “ ‘whether the claim is so interwoven with the contract that it could not stand alone or, on the other hand, is completely independent of the contract and could be maintained without reference to the contract.’ ”
Fridl v. Cook,
The Gerwells argue for arbitration based on the fact that the parties’ dispute concerns issues governed by the 1993 agreement, namely the transfer of partnership interest and partnership liabilities. They argue that the arbitration clause, broadly written, was intended to apply to all disputes related to the partnership relationship, which would include a dispute involving an assignment of partnership interest. The Gerwells further argue that the assignment agreement exists only to effectuate the terms of the 1993 agreement; thus, without the backdrop of the 1993 agreement, the assignment of the interest between the parties is meaningless. The Gerwells conclude, therefore, that given the presumption of arbitrability and the fact that the dispute touches upon an issue relating to the 1993 agreement, the arbitration clause extends to Moran’s claims.
In arguing against arbitration, Moran notes that the underlying dispute does not arise out of the 1993 agreement, which *32 contains the arbitration clause, but rather, the underlying dispute arises out of the separate assignment agreement. She thus concludes that the dispute is not subject to the arbitration clause of the 1993 agreement.
In support of her argument, Moran relies primarily upon
Weber v. Hall,
We are not persuaded by Moran’s reliance on
Weber
or by her argument. The instant case and
Weber
appear to be factually similar. Both cases involve a situation where the parties entered into an original agreement and a subsequent agreement, with an arbitration clause contained only in the original agreement. And the plaintiffs in both cases asserted claims based not on the original agreement, but rather based on the subsequent agreement. What distinguishes our case from
Weber,
however, is the relationship between the two separate agreements. Here, unlike in
Weber,
the subsequently-executed agreement is contemplated by the original agreement. The 1993 agreement requires express written approval of all the partners for an assignment of interest to be effective. To the extent, therefore, that the assignment of interest was executed in accordance with the terms of the 1993 agreement, the two agreements, contrary to Moran’s contention, are not so separate such that a dispute about the latter agreement does not concern or
touch upon
the former agreement.
See McFall,
Importantly, the arbitration clause at issue is broad.
See Dallas Cardiology As-socs., P.A v. Mallick,
The result we reach today is consistent with at least one federal court’s decision in a case involving similar facts. In
S.A. Mineracao Da Trindade-Samitri v. Utah International, Inc.,
Fraudulent Inducement
The Samitri decision also undermines Moran’s claims that she should not be compelled to arbitrate because the assignment was fraudulently induced. A similar claim was rejected in Samitri. Id. at 195-96. The rule in Texas is that:
“[t]he fraudulent inducement must go to the agreement to arbitrate itself and not to the underlying contract. It is not sufficient that fraud induced some part of the contract that is submitted to arbitration. The issue whether there is a valid agreement to arbitrate is separate from the issue of whether all or part of the underlying contract was breached. The former is a fact question for the trial court, while the latter is determined by the arbitrator.”
Holk v. Biard,
Conclusion
Because the assignment agreement arises out of and was executed in accordance with the 1993 agreement, we hold that the underlying dispute regarding the interpretation and execution of the assignment agreement falls within the scope of the arbitration clause contained in the 1993 agreement. The trial court’s order denying the Gerwells’ plea in abatement and motion to compel arbitration and stay litigation is vacated. Judgment is rendered that the parties submit to binding arbitration in accordance with their arbitration agreement.
Notes
. The appealable order also denied Moran’s Application for a Temporary Injunction. Moran does not complain about that denial on appeal.
